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A δ-cell subpopulation with a pro-β-cell identity contributes to efficient age-independent recovery in a zebrafish model of diabetes

Claudio Andrés Carril Pardo, Laura Massoz, Marie A Dupont, David Bergemann, Jordane Bourdouxhe, Arnaud Lavergne, Estefania Tarifeño-Saldivia, Christian SM Helker, Didier YR Stainier, Bernard Peers, Marianne M Voz, Isabelle Manfroid

2022eLife37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Restoring damaged β-cells in diabetic patients by harnessing the plasticity of other pancreatic cells raises the questions of the efficiency of the process and of the functionality of the new Insulin -expressing cells. To overcome the weak regenerative capacity of mammals, we used regeneration-prone zebrafish to study β-cells arising following destruction. We show that most new in s ulin cells differ from the original β-cells as they coexpress Somatostatin and Insulin. These bihormonal cells are abundant, functional and able to normalize glycemia. Their formation in response to β-cell destruction is fast, efficient, and age-independent. Bihormonal cells are transcriptionally close to a subset of δ-cells that we identified in control islets and that are characterized by the expression of somatostatin 1.1 ( sst1.1 ) and by genes essential for glucose-induced Insulin secretion in β-cells such as pdx1 , s lc2a2 and gck . We observed in vivo the conversion of monohormonal sst1.1- expressing cells to sst1.1+ ins + bihormonal cells following β-cell destruction. Our findings support the conclusion that sst1.1 δ-cells possess a pro-β identity enabling them to contribute to the neogenesis of Insulin-producing cells during regeneration. This work unveils that abundant and functional bihormonal cells benefit to diabetes recovery in zebrafish.

Topics & Concepts

NeogenesisZebrafishBiologyCell biologyIsletSomatostatinDiabetes mellitusInsulinRegeneration (biology)Pancreatic isletsReprogrammingIn vivoIdentity (music)Regenerative medicineSecretionGeneProglucagonCellStem cellBioinformaticsNeurosciencePancreasGene expressionComputational biologyEnteroendocrine cellIdentification (biology)Process (computing)Cellular differentiationTranscriptomePancreatic function and diabetesCongenital heart defects researchZebrafish Biomedical Research Applications
A δ-cell subpopulation with a pro-β-cell identity contributes to efficient age-independent recovery in a zebrafish model of diabetes | Litcius